Reputation: 3110
I am running tomcat 6 on Centos 6.4 and have started it sucessfully. There were no errors on start. catalina.log reads:
2012-08-11 14:23:42,941 | INFO | main | o.a.c.http11.Http11NioProtocol | Starting Coyote HTTP/1.1 on http-xx.xx.xx.xx-8080
2012-08-11 14:23:42,960 | INFO | main | o.a.catalina.startup.Catalina | Server startup in 121483 ms
And ps -x
shows it as running.
Unfortunately it is not responding on port 8080 however and netstat -atnp | grep LISTEN
does not list it.
Any ideas of what could cause this?
Upvotes: 9
Views: 25176
Reputation: 591
I thing following activity will also can be work.But yes, its only for Cent OS. Goto
vi /etc/sysconfig/iptables
Just add following line and change your port as you want.
-A INPUT -m state --state NEW -m tcp -p tcp --dport 8080 -j ACCEPT
save the file by pressing esc from keyboard and type :wq
Then restart iptables:
service iptables restart
I thing it will be work.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 3110
It was iptables blocking the port...
A quick way to solve this is to turn off iptables with:
/etc/init.d/iptables save
/etc/init.d/iptables stop
In general iptables should be enabled but configured to open the ports needed. Turning it off without using a replacement is a bad practice.
In my case the machines were not doing anything sensitive and were on an internal network without internet access so turning off iptables was good enough.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 53545
If the problem is that the port is not configured in iptables like Nash suggests, then you can configure it as follows:
vi /etc/sysconfig/iptables
add the following line to the file:
-A RH-Firewall-1-INPUT -m state --state NEW -m tcp -p tcp --dport 8080 -j ACCEPT
save the file on exit and restart iptables:
service iptables restart
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 1198
the answer of @alfasin is correct, but for CentOS 6 the comand line down not work
-A RH-Firewall-1-INPUT -m state --state NEW -m tcp -p tcp --dport 8080 -j ACCEPT
You need free chain one by one, this mode:
-I INPUT -m state --state NEW -m tcp -p tcp --dport 8080 -j ACCEPT
-I OUTPUT -m state --state NEW -m tcp -p tcp --dport 8080 -j ACCEPT
-I FORWARD -m state --state NEW -m tcp -p tcp --dport 8080 -j ACCEPT
Upvotes: 6